I need a script that will open a new window (popup / new link) in a specific size, but will also close the old window (where the popup came from). I know the popup window is easy but finding a work-able close window script as the new window is opened is impossible!!
I have a HTML and I am opening another link in a separate window using window.open() . The child window is something like 'http://yahoo.com' which is out side html. I need to refresh the parent window when the child window is closed.
With ref. to MS IE, when I use window.open with the usual sizing and 'toolbar=yes', 'menubar=yes' the target URL opens in a new window - but without an address bar.
'addressbar=yes' does not seem valid. Can someone please tell me how to proceed?
cannot get a new (picture) window to open in Firefox without the title and address bars (or anything else, just the image). IE shows just the title bar, with or without the code:
function newWindow() {window.open('./pageaddress.html','winname','top=20,left=20,directories=0,titlebar=0,toolbar=0,location=0,status=0,menubar=0,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,width=400,height=350');} </script>
The window opens fine, but always shows the address and title bars. I have read the W3 Schools options list (and other posts) and tried both 'no' and '0' as values, without any success. What am I missing and is there any way to make this work - it didn't even work in the W3 Schools 'try it yourself' test page!
I have seen some very nice 'slowly-opening' windows (increasing in size)
Can I get javascript to open a window and close it, without a user seeing it? Basically, I want to open a site, so it downloads and sets a cookie before I display a link for a user to click on.
client wants for a window with no toolbars to open (technical and 'esthetical' reasons) after the window, user clicks on, is being closed.
I told them about security settings in browsers and no cross-browsers solutions and all of that we know, but they have told me they have seen that before and how then the annoying pop-up windows work? . . .
I have 4 images on a page and when someone clicks on one of them I open a secondary window and write a few lines to it describing the image.
If they don't close that secondary window however, and click on another of these 4 images, my write commands print further down on that secondary window.
I was reading through an old javascript book that talks about the win1.document.clear(); method, but information on the Internet tells me that this is now obsolete, or was just working on Netscape.
So then I decided to close the secondary window before re-opening it. But if the user _did_ close the secondary window, I get an error saying that the window I'm trying to close is already closed (or doesn't exist to be exact)!
Is there a way to clear the document in a window that I opened and wrote to? Or is there a way to detect if win1 exists or not? If it exists, I would close it. If it didn't exist, I would just re-open a new one.
I have a page with 3 iframes it has a link to open up a page and when the user clicks on a link on that page - I want the new page to close and the link to open in the second iframe on the original page
In the onclick event I want to close the current window then open'ConfirmPage.aspx'. Whats the best way to do this? Can I close the first page then open the next, or should I be redirecting? If so whats the best way to redirect using javascript?
I have a popup that submits a link. After the link is submitted, I want the user to be able to close the popup and go to the submitted link in one click. How can I do this.
I have my reasons for using popups, it's hard to explain. Please don't tell me how bad popups are, I know they're bad.
I found this forum while running out of ideas and being extremely desperate to fixing a probably small javascript error in a script. the script is supposed to open a small form window that allows the user to input an email address and update it to proceed. the form item is initially unchecked, but as the user clicks it and enter his email address, it updates the value of the email address and the box becomes "checkable". the problem is that with both IE and firefox, the box doesn't close again, doesn't get checkable and basically doesn't work. in the firefox debugging console, I found the following error:
Quote:
The part responsible in the javascript for this section is:
Quote:
And the html code that is supposed to pop up the box is:
I have multiple parent sections on the page. Each section has 3 child sections. Each parent toggles open and closed. and within each section there are buttons to toggle the children open and closed.
In the case of both the parents and their children, when a parent is toggled open I want the other parents to toggle closed . The same applies to the children of each parent. I want to close all the other open children when a child is toggled open. Rather like some accordions - which I can not use for this function. This way there is only one parent and one child open at any time
Because of the number of parents and children on the page I can not use Ids. All are designated by classes
I want to trap the window.close() event when the user clicks on the close button of the browser using javascript. Can anyone shed light on this problem ?
I'm creating a form that will only allow user with specific at email addresses to be able to submit the form. For instance, these are preferred customers from say a company called Sanderson. Michael may have the email michael@sanderson.com. I want to make sure that my form only excepts emails from this company; only specific @sanderson.com email addressesHow can I do that?Right now I'm trying to use:
I have an issue with a registration form. What I would like to do is only allow a certain email domain in the 'email' field. Eg. Only allowing @gmail.com email addresses, and all others would receive an error. This is the line of code that I believe needs changing:
function isEmail(valor){if(/^w+([.-]?w+)*@w+([.-]?w+)*(.w{2,4})+$/.test(valor)){return(true)}else{return false;}}
I am not too familiar with this but through my hours of research, I believe that I need to add something to this line.
How can I bypass the validation for a specific email address? Let's say "if the user submits abc@test.com" then I do not want to validate this address and accept it as it is.
I'm looking to make a form that could potentially span over several steps (or pages) and have the details submitted to an email address. How can I split the form into multiple steps, so step 1 includes 5 questions, click next, then step 2 includes the next 5 questions, then on submit it emails the details (from both step 1 & 2) to a specific email address in one email?
If anyone could point me in the right direction or give me a hand that would be great. I've spent ages looking for some answers.
Trying to learn the basics... Here is a script for three toggle buttons that each when clicked open their corresponding divs. Fine. Now how does one go about automatically closing an open div when clicking on a new 'toggler' that opens it's div? I see other posts about this very question, but I'm just not grasping the logic.